FIRST EDITION. Barrow accompanied the Earl of Macartney as official interpreter to the embassy to the Emperor of China, having learned Chinese from a former pupil, Thomas Staunton. "The embassy was a magnificent failure, arriving at Peking with gifts which included all the wonders of Western civilization -- artillery, telescopes, a coach-and-four, a balloon and pilot -- Macartney was treated with hospitable disgust before being dismissed with polite contempt. According to the Chinese Emperor, the presence of a British Ambassador was 'not in harmony with the regulations of the Celestial Empire, we also feel very much that it is of no advantage to your country'" (F. Fleming, Barrow's Boys, 1998, p.4). The "African" portion of Barrow's work includes an account of "the journey to Lattakoo, undertaken by Messrs. Daniell, Truter, Somerville, Scholz, and the author" and is based on "a manuscript in Dutch written by Mr. Truter" (Mendelssohn). Cordier Sinica IV, 2390; Abbey Travel 514; Mendelssohn I, p.89; Tooley 86.